1. Predominantly defective CD8+ T cell immunity to SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccination in lung transplant recipients
- Author
-
Taus, Ellie, Shino, Michael Y, Ibarrondo, F Javier, Hausner, Mary Ann, Hofmann, Christian, and Yang, Otto O
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Immunology ,Organ Transplantation ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Pneumonia & Influenza ,Vaccine Related ,Pneumonia ,Transplantation ,Lung ,Biotechnology ,Immunization ,Biodefense ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Infectious Diseases ,Prevention of disease and conditions ,and promotion of well-being ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,3.4 Vaccines ,Aetiology ,Infection ,Inflammatory and immune system ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Transplant Recipients ,CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,2019-nCoV Vaccine mRNA-1273 ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Leukocytes ,Mononuclear ,COVID-19 ,Vaccination ,Antibodies ,Cytokines ,Antibodies ,Viral ,COVID-19 mRNA vaccine ,Solid organ transplantation ,Lung transplantation ,Cellular immunity ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
BackgroundAlthough mRNA vaccines have overall efficacy preventing morbidity/mortality from SARS-CoV-2 infection, immunocompromised persons remain at risk. Antibodies mostly prevent early symptomatic infection, but cellular immunity, particularly the virus-specific CD8+ T cell response, is protective against disease. Defects in T cell responses to vaccination have not been well characterized in immunocompromised hosts; persons with lung transplantation are particularly vulnerable to vaccine failure with severe illness.MethodsComparison groups included persons with lung transplantation and no history of COVID-19 (21 and 19 persons after initial mRNA vaccination and a third booster vaccination respectively), 8 lung transplantation participants recovered from COVID-19, and 22 non-immunocompromised healthy control individuals after initial mRNA vaccination (without history of COVID-19). Anti-spike T cell responses were assayed by stimulating peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) with pooled small overlapping peptides spanning the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein, followed by intracellular cytokine staining (ICS) and flow cytometry for release of cytokines in response to stimulation, including negative controls (no peptide stimulation) and positive controls (phorbol myristate acetate [PMA] and ionomycin stimulation). To evaluate for low frequency memory responses, PBMCs were cultured in the presence of the mRNA-1273 vaccine for 14 days before this evaluation.ResultsIonophore stimulation of PBMCs revealed a less inflammatory milieu in terms of interleukin (IL)-2, IL-4, and IL-10 profiling in lung transplantation individuals, reflecting the effect of immunosuppressive treatments. Similar to what we previously reported in healthy vaccinees, spike-specific responses in lung transplantation recipients were undetectable (
- Published
- 2023